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Transcript
The Greeks at War!
Between 500 and 400 B.C. the Greeks
fought several wars.
Two were against the powerful Persian
Empire to the east of Greece.
Then a civil war broke out among the citystates of Greece.
1. Who did the Greeks fight
against in two wars?
Why did the Persians invade Greece?
In 519 B.C. the Persians
conquered a group of people who
lived in Asia Minor called the
Ionian Greeks.
In 499 B.C. the Ionian
Greeks asked the mainland
Greeks to help them rebel
against the Persians.
AGH!
Those Greeks
will pay for
this
We’re on
the way
Help!
Athens sent warships to help
them, but they were not strong
enough to defeat the Persian
army.
This made the Persian King, Darius, very angry
with Greece.
2. What did the Athenians do
that angered Darius, the King of
the Persians?
In 490 B.C. Darius sent 600 ships and thousands of soldiers to invade
Greece. He wanted to punish the Athenians for helping the rebels.
The Persian army landed at
Marathon, north of Athens,
in 490 B.C.
The Persians greatly
outnumbered the Greeks.
The Persians were
amazed at the strong
will of the small
Athenian force.
They had no horses or
archers, only fierce
foot soldiers.
After a few days, the
Persians decided to
attack Athens by sea.
Persian
Empire
Athens
Marathon
Sparta
While they were loading their ships, the
Athenians attacked and defeated them.
The Persians Retreated.
3. Why did Darius send
hundreds of ships to Greece?
Marathon
The Greeks sent their fastest runner Pheidippides
to carry home news of the victory.
He sprinted 26.2 miles from the battle site to the
city-state of Athens.
He arrived and said, “Rejoice, we conquer,” and
died from exhaustion.
The Marathon race is named after this event.
4. What city did Pheidippides
run from to tell Athens of their
victory?
What Happened at Thermopylae?
The Greek ruler, Themistocles, knew this was a temporary victory.
He encouraged the Athenians to build up their fleet and prepare for
battle with the Persians.
In 480 B.C. Darius’ son, Xerxes, sent a larger
force to conquer Greece.
He sent 200,000 soldiers and nearly 1,000 ships.
By this time Athens had convinced Sparta to join
them in battle. Twenty Greek city-states joined
together to meet the Persian invaders.
Sparta took charge of the army.
5. Why would Athens leave the
Spartans in charge of the army?
Persia Invades
Greece
The Persian army had little trouble as it moved through
northern Greece.
It came to a narrow mountain pass called Thermopylae,
there 7,000 Greeks waited for the Persians.
For several days they stopped the Persian army from
moving forward.
Someone led the Persians behind the Greek army, the
Athenian soldiers began to retreat to their ships as the
Persians marched forward.
A small Spartan force of about 300 men commanded by King Leonidas,
guarded the mountain pass of Thermopylae.
They held out heroically against the enormous Persian force for three days.
They were betrayed when someone told the Persians how to get in behind
the army.
They were defeated, but won valuable time for the rest of the Greeks.
6. Why was the battle of
Thermopylae so important?
Who won at Salamis?
The Persians marched
south after their
victory at
Thermopylae and
destroyed the city of
Athens.
The Athenians had
already moved to
Salamis, a small
nearby island.
Thermopylae
Salamis
Athens
More than 800
Persian ships
attacked the
Athenian navy
near the island.
The large Persian ships could not maneuver in the water.
The smaller Greek ships destroyed them.
7. Why did the Athenians win
the battle of Salamis?
Results of the Persian Wars
The Greek sense of uniqueness was increased.
Athens emerged as the most powerful city-state in Greece.
Athens organized the Delian League, an alliance with other Greek
city-states.
Athens used the league to assert power and build an Athenian
Empire.
They moved the treasury to Athens, and forced people to stay in
the league against their will.
8. What happened after the
Greeks won the war against the
Persians ?
Athens in the Age of Pericles
The wise and skillful leadership of Pericles brought
about a Golden age in Athens.
This was from about 460 to 429 B.C. and is often
called the Age of Pericles.
Pericles believed that all male citizens, regardless of wealth or social class, should take part
in government.
He paid salaries to men who held public office.
This enabled the poor to serve in the government.
The assembly met several times a month and needed at least 6,000 members present to take
a vote. This was direct democracy, a large number of citizens took part in the day to day
affairs of the government.
Pericles stated, “We alone, regard a man who takes no interest in public affairs, not as
harmless, but as a useless character.
Pericles rebuilt the Acropolis and turned Athens into the cultural center of Greece.
9. Why was the Golden Age of
Athens also called the Age of
Pericles?
Greek against Greek
Many Greeks resented the Athenian domination.
The Greek world split into rival camps.
To counter the Delian League, Sparta and other enemies of
Athens formed the Peloponnesian League.
Sparta encouraged an Oligarchy (government run by business)
in the states of the Peloponnesian League, and Athens
supported democracy.
A 27 year war broke out in 431 B.C. engulfing all of Greece
10. What were the names of the
two rival camps that Greece split
into?
Peloponnesian War
Athens faced a serious geographic disadvantage from the start.
Sparta was located inland, the Athenian navy was no good against
them.
When Sparta invaded Athens, Pericles allowed people from the
countryside to move inside the city.
Overcrowding led to a plague that killed a third of the people.
Internal struggles undermined the Democratic government of Athens.
Sparta even allied with Persia, their old enemy, against the Delian
League.
Finally, in 404 B.C., with the help of the Persian navy, the Spartans
captured Athens and stripped it of its fleet and empire.
11. What happened to Athens
when Sparta defeated them?
The Aftermath of War
The Peloponnesian war ended Athenian greatness.
In Athens Democratic government suffered: corruption and
selfish interests replaced order.
Fighting continued to disrupt the Greek world.
Sparta itself suffered defeat at the hands of Thebes,
another Greek city-state.
Greece was left vulnerable to invasion.
Cultural development was arrested.
Macedonia and
Alexander the Great
In 338 B.C., King Phillip II of
Macedonia, led his army from the north
and conquered Greece.
After his death his son, Alexander the
Great, went on to conquer the entire
Greek world.
12. What territory (region) did
Alexander the Great come from?